Found Deceased Russia - Catherine Serou, 34, American, got in car w/ stranger, Nizhny Novgorod, 15 Jun 2021 arrest

  • #41
I don't have any concern, rather an explanation why a woman would get into this guy's car-he looks very average and clean cut, his criminal history is not evident, he does not raise suspicions.

You know, and I am almost positive he did not spend much time in prison. Remembering people who did, even if they were “respected”…one thing is, people smoke a lot in Russian prisons, and drink this very strong tea. Consequently, they don’t look healthy at all when they get out. He is different. I wish I could see his car. It must have been a cut above what people in that rural area were driving.

P. S. On the top photo there is CS sitting in his car. I would not tell the car from it, but here is how it looked.
Лайф узнал подробности жестокого убийства американской студентки в Нижегородской области
 
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  • #42
  • #43
She had served as a logistics/embark specialist in the United States Marine Corps, getting out as a corporal in 2011, according to her releasable service records.

She had one deployment to Afghanistan from November 2008 to April 2009, Yvonne Carlock, Deputy Communications Strategy Officer with Manpower & Reserve Affairs, told Marine Corps Times on Monday.

Suspect arraigned in killing of US Marine veteran in Russia
 
  • #44
She had served as a logistics/embark specialist in the United States Marine Corps, getting out as a corporal in 2011, according to her releasable service records.

She had one deployment to Afghanistan from November 2008 to April 2009, Yvonne Carlock, Deputy Communications Strategy Officer with Manpower & Reserve Affairs, told Marine Corps Times on Monday.

Suspect arraigned in killing of US Marine veteran in Russia

I think her story is representative of many millennials. Probably, joined the army to afford college education afterwards, and you can see her interests (fashion, art history). Liberal arts colleges provide excellent education, but I guess it is not always easy to find a job later.
So the rest I view as the attempt of a 34-year old, without a solid job, to find her place in life. (Interestingly, some Russian newspaper classified the case as “domestic crime”, I don’t know what to make out of it, yet).
Very sad. Millennials in general are naive and trusting, it seems. RIP, Catherine.
 
  • #45
I think her story is representative of many millennials. Probably, joined the army to afford college education afterwards, and you can see her interests (fashion, art history). Liberal arts colleges provide excellent education, but I guess it is not always easy to find a job later.
So the rest I view as the attempt of a 34-year old, without a solid job, to find her place in life. (Interestingly, some Russian newspaper classified the case as “domestic crime”, I don’t know what to make out of it, yet).
Very sad. Millennials in general are naive and trusting, it seems. RIP, Catherine.
From what I gather (reading various articles), she had an office job lined up, but wanted an adventure. Going to Russia to study was that adventure.
Apparently, people told her she looked like a Russian (she did have slavic features), so she became interested in Russian culture.
 
  • #46
  • #47
I saw her video - 11 months ago Catherine was shown in a pilot TV program of Nizhny Novgorod. She was commenting Russian news, mostly, in Russian. She spoke a little bit of English in the start, but with time, was breaking through the language barrier and spoke pretty good Russian.. It is hard to understand for English-speaking watchers, but she had great, sparkling, sense of humor. But one can see her personality, looks, posture.
Hard to imagine that such a vibrant young woman is dead.
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  • #48
What a horrific case. It mobilises all those it-could-happen-to-anyone shudders, because we've all been in the position of making the decision to trust someone and hoping it will work out OK. I think that's what the text is about: what are the odds that I will send this text and actually turn out to have been abducted for real. She sent it as a talisman. If I say I'm being abducted and I'm not, this will become a thing we can all laugh about over a glass of wine next time we're together. I can almost feel that sick pit-of-the-stomach fear she must have been trying to ward off. Poor woman. And her poor mother.

I agree with people who have said she seems to have been in an odd place professionally and personally. She seems to me to have been someone who had made a few false starts and perhaps felt this time she'd finally found her niche. Three years is a long time for a Masters. Maybe she wasn't thinking to return to the US. Maybe, rather than planning to practise immigration law in the US, she was hoping to practise in Russia smoothing the business and residency pathway for US citizens. She looks happy in the youtube video. I can see that if you're in that space where you feel things are finally working out, you might embrace the idea of trusting life, and make choices that look reckless to the outside eye. Maybe she finally felt blessed and as though nothing could go wrong.

:(
 
  • #49
What a horrific case. It mobilises all those it-could-happen-to-anyone shudders, because we've all been in the position of making the decision to trust someone and hoping it will work out OK. I think that's what the text is about: what are the odds that I will send this text and actually turn out to have been abducted for real. She sent it as a talisman. If I say I'm being abducted and I'm not, this will become a thing we can all laugh about over a glass of wine next time we're together. I can almost feel that sick pit-of-the-stomach fear she must have been trying to ward off. Poor woman. And her poor mother.

I agree with people who have said she seems to have been in an odd place professionally and personally. She seems to me to have been someone who had made a few false starts and perhaps felt this time she'd finally found her niche. Three years is a long time for a Masters. Maybe she wasn't thinking to return to the US. Maybe, rather than planning to practise immigration law in the US, she was hoping to practise in Russia smoothing the business and residency pathway for US citizens. She looks happy in the youtube video. I can see that if you're in that space where you feel things are finally working out, you might embrace the idea of trusting life, and make choices that look reckless to the outside eye. Maybe she finally felt blessed and as though nothing could go wrong.

:(

Keep in mind, that her situation - being a foreigner with good knowledge of the Russian - was not a bad one. Her jokes give it out, she looks at many aspects from another, very observant, angle.

Some people can make really good money working at such jobs, where one is “a local, but also, not”. On a personal note, it seems that people responded to her humor, the anchorman called her “a cool girl”.

As I have said, we all did it in Russia, jumping into the first available car, and people still do it. It is so commonplace, no one would think twice about it. It is not a reckless choice for us (in the 90-es, I found myself in the car with two nice, polite, young career criminals, and it was obvious they planned to spend the rest of their day differently, but they were laughing at the “moonlighting job” they took, all very polite). Maybe it was when he took the unexpected turn, that she sent that text.

The only unusual thing is that she is sitting next to the driver, I’d never do this.
 
  • #50

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